988 research outputs found

    Speaker recognition using frequency filtered spectral energies

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    The spectral parameters that result from filtering the frequency sequence of log mel-scaled filter-bank energies with a simple first or second order FIR filter have proved to be an efficient speech representation in terms of both speech recognition rate and computational load. Recently, the authors have shown that this frequency filtering can approximately equalize the cepstrum variance enhancing the oscillations of the spectral envelope curve that are most effective for discrimination between speakers. Even better speaker identification results than using melcepstrum have been obtained on the TIMIT database, especially when white noise was added. On the other hand, the hybridization of both linear prediction and filter-bank spectral analysis using either cepstral transformation or the alternative frequency filtering has been explored for speaker verification. The combination of hybrid spectral analysis and frequency filtering, that had shown to be able to outperform the conventional techniques in clean and noisy word recognition, has yield good text-dependent speaker verification results on the new speaker-oriented telephone-line POLYCOST database.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Porting concepts from DNNs back to GMMs

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    Deep neural networks (DNNs) have been shown to outperform Gaussian Mixture Models (GMM) on a variety of speech recognition benchmarks. In this paper we analyze the differences between the DNN and GMM modeling techniques and port the best ideas from the DNN-based modeling to a GMM-based system. By going both deep (multiple layers) and wide (multiple parallel sub-models) and by sharing model parameters, we are able to close the gap between the two modeling techniques on the TIMIT database. Since the 'deep' GMMs retain the maximum-likelihood trained Gaussians as first layer, advanced techniques such as speaker adaptation and model-based noise robustness can be readily incorporated. Regardless of their similarities, the DNNs and the deep GMMs still show a sufficient amount of complementarity to allow effective system combination

    Fractal based speech recognition and synthesis

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    Transmitting a linguistic message is most often the primary purpose of speech com­munication and the recognition of this message by machine that would be most useful. This research consists of two major parts. The first part presents a novel and promis­ing approach for estimating the degree of recognition of speech phonemes and makes use of a new set of features based fractals. The main methods of computing the frac­tal dimension of speech signals are reviewed and a new speaker-independent speech recognition system developed at De Montfort University is described in detail. Fi­nally, a Least Square Method as well as a novel Neural Network algorithm is employed to derive the recognition performance of the speech data. The second part of this work studies the synthesis of speech words, which is based mainly on the fractal dimension to create natural sounding speech. The work shows that by careful use of the fractal dimension together with the phase of the speech signal to ensure consistent intonation contours, natural-sounding speech synthesis is achievable with word level speech. In order to extend the flexibility of this framework, we focused on the filtering and the compression of the phase to maintain and produce natural sounding speech. A ‘naturalness level’ is achieved as a result of the fractal characteristic used in the synthesis process. Finally, a novel speech synthesis system based on fractals developed at De Montfort University is discussed. Throughout our research simulation experiments were performed on continuous speech data available from the Texas Instrument Massachusetts institute of technology ( TIMIT) database, which is designed to provide the speech research community with a standarised corpus for the acquisition of acoustic-phonetic knowledge and for the development and evaluation of automatic speech recognition system
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